Who uses their chicken compost?

Right now, I am without chicken, so it has been bunny poo for me. I really like using that as it doesn't burn plants (it is a 'cold' manure so long as it isn't soaked in rabbit pee), and scattering them on the surface turns them into little time release capsules.
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Rabbit manure is the best there is.
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Right now, I am without chicken, so it has been bunny poo for me. I really like using that as it doesn't burn plants (it is a 'cold' manure so long as it isn't soaked in rabbit pee), and scattering them on the surface turns them into little time release capsules.
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I never thought about them as time release capsules! I guess it' s time to get a rabbit...
 
Agreed with the rabbit manure.

We use our chicken manure. It's worked into in the compost pile daily, and sets for a few months. We draw the compost from the bottom of the heap to spread in the garden.

Chicken manure MUST be composted otherwise it's just too "hot" for regular usage.
 
gickelvolk wrote: Chicken manure MUST be composted otherwise it's just too "hot" for regular usage.

While that is generally true, it's mainly if you use straight chicken manure. I use my "barn sweepings" directly on the garden beds, and while the mixture of poop, wood shavings, etc. does get warm, it never gets hot - either temperature-wise or chemically. I've been topdressing my gardenbeds directly with uncomposted chicken manure/bedding mix for nearly 20 years with never a problem.

In fact, manure mixed with soiled bedding seems to break down faster. When I topdress with it, the lower layer becomes rich brown soil in less than 3 months, and the upper layers show signs of rapid decomposition within a couple of weeks. Especially if we have lots of rain and mild weather. The soil organisms break it down quickly when we have those conditions.
 
hey,

Yea, forgot about that. Heavily dressed my raspberries w/manure/straw mix, heavy enuf that kept the weeds from coming thru. Worked a charm.

Didn't remember partly because can't tell this spring.

cheers
 
I always side dress my veggie plants with the chicken manure / pine shaving mix. I planted three tomato plants just last month and they already look great and are growing extra fast. These were very small plants when i set them out too.

The first is almost 3 foot tall.



These actually took a late spring frost and almost died but they seem to be doing rather well.



I only have 5 plants because I'm the only one in the family that likes tomatoes. Good for me
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RedBarnFarms,
Those 'mater plants look fantastic! And the topdressing of manure and pine shavings looks just like mine. It keeps weeds down as it enriches the soil.
 
Hmmm, I wonder if horse manure mixed with straw from the stall works "as is" like chicken manure.
I have LOTS of 'pre-mixed' stall "leavings". The lady who was using the barn until last week picked up daily and totally replaced the straw every Saturday. Of course, a "unit" of horse manure is a LOT larger than chicken manure. Might still need to compost it before use if for no reason other than to let it decompose to a reasonable size. But then again, there is about a year's "supply" and the stuff on the bottom might already be broken down enough. :)
 
Hmmm, I wonder if horse manure mixed with straw from the stall works "as is" like chicken manure.
I have LOTS of 'pre-mixed' stall "leavings". The lady who was using the barn until last week picked up daily and totally replaced the straw every Saturday. Of course, a "unit" of horse manure is a LOT larger than chicken manure. Might still need to compost it before use if for no reason other than to let it decompose to a reasonable size. But then again, there is about a year's "supply" and the stuff on the bottom might already be broken down enough. :)

Horse manure is a cold manure and can be put directly on plants.
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